Love my Curve and I'm hooked with T-Mobile. However, I'm trying to get my bill to come down a little so I knocked off the HotSpot @ Home Add-On feature @ $19.99.

#1) I can still use Wi-Fi to connect to the Internet and browse via Wi-Fi. Is this costing me any sort of money or is it part of my blackberry unlimited data package?

Browsing is free.

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Originally Posted by DaveAnderson

#2) I can still make phone calls through UMA, right? It just costs me my minutes?

Yep. Unless you have the H@H service it will take your minutes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaveAnderson

#3) If #2 is yes, what about on weekends? Can I use unlimited UMA on weekends even with no HotSpot @ Home Add-On?

It acts the same as using a cell tower. Night, Weekends, Mobile-Mobile, and MyFaves would NOT use minutes. In simplistic terms you basically have a cell phone tower in your house.
We wired up the basement at work, which is essentially a bunker with zero signal penetration, and got great results. Saved $80-100k over having the telco bring in repeaters.

These were the exact answers I needed.
I am with Sprint and the signal in my house stinks. My wife cannot get a signal at work which is an art museum and basically a concrete bunker.
So - to go with this option (and I would really rather have a Curve than a Pearl and I know my wife would do better with a Curve) we would have a signal at home and at work. We have a wireless set up at home and she has public wifi at work.
Only 9 more months of a contract with Sprint - booo hooo.

Before signing into a contract with T-Mobile you may want to try and test out the public wireless your wife has available to her at work. UMA will not work on every single wireless network you find and if you are able to get UMA on your device the call quality may be horrible if the bandwidth available is low.

When I worked for T-Mobile there were always folks who neglected to do some research before signing on only to call later complaining they lived in an area with zero cell coverage (I never understood that one, they signed up with T-Mobile so how is it T-Mobile's fault they live in an area with no coverage... check the coverage map for where you plan on using the phone before signing the contract maybe?) or their 8320 wouldn't work on UMA with <insert name of some unknown 3rd party wireless router or public wireless network here>.

Take what the salesperson in the store with a grain of salt especially if you hear them say "Oh yeah, you'll get UMA anywhere you can get wireless."